Ulmus × hollandica Mill., often known simply as Dutch elm, is a natural hybrid between Wych elmUlmus glabra and field elmUlmus minor which commonly occurs across Europe wherever the ranges of the parent species overlap. In England, according to the field-studies of R. H. Richens, "The largest area is a band extending across Essex from the Hertfordshire border to southern Suffolk. The next largest is in northern Bedfordshire and adjoining parts of Northamptonshire. Comparable zones occur in Picardy and Cotentin in northern France". Ulmus × hollandica hybrids, natural and artificial, have been widely planted elsewhere.
Description
In form and foliage, the trees are broadly intermediate between the two species. F1 hybrids between wych and field elm are fully fertile, but produce widely variant progeny. Many also inherit the suckering habit of their field elm parent. Both Richens and Rackham noted that examples in the East Anglian hybridization zone were sometimes pendulous in form.
The great elm in The Grove of Magdalen College, Oxford, photographed by Henry Taunt in 1900, long believed to be a wych elm before being identified by Elwes as a 'Vegeta'-type hybrid, was for a time the largest elm known in Britain before it was blown down in 1911. It measured 44 m tall, its trunk at breast height being 2.6 m in diameter, and comprised an estimated of timber, making it the largest tree of any kind in Britain and possibly the largest north of the Alps. However, as Elwes pointed out, its calculated age would place its planting in the late 17th or early 18th century, long before the introduction of the Huntingdon elm, making the tree in question more likely to be a Chichester elm. A second tree nearby, described by Elwes as "similar in habit and foliage" and tall by in girth in 1912, was confirmed by Helen Bancroft in a Gardener's Chronicle article in 1934 as a 'Vegeta'-type hybrid; it was propagated by Heybroek in 1958 and cultivated at the Baarn elm research institute as clone P41. The tree survived till the 1960s. Like the Queens' College Chichester elms in Cambridge, the Magdalen College trees were not observed to produce root suckers, though The Grove at Magdalen has long been a deer park, and any sucker growth is likely to have been cropped. The Oxford zoologist Robert Gunther attributed the larger tree's unusual size to the fact that it had been growing on a phosphate-rich bone-bed, made up of the remains of mammoths and other prehistoric animals. With a girth of 6.9 m and a height of, the Ulmus × hollandica hybrid elm on Great Saling Green, Great Saling, near Braintree, Essex, reckoned at least 350 years old, was reputedly the largest elm in England, before succumbing to Dutch Elm Disease in the 1980s; Elwes and Henry misidentified it as U. nitens. Examples of mature survivors in the East Anglian hybridisation zone include those near Royston, Hertfordshire, designated 'Elm of the Year, 2004' by Das Ulmen Büro. An example of the weeping form survives at Actons Farm, Sawbridgeworth, Hertfordshire. There are two notable TROBI Champion trees in the British Isles, one at Little Blakenham, Suffolk, measuring ? high by d.b.h. in 2008, the other at Nounsley, Essex, high by d.b.h. in 2005.
In art
The elms in the Suffolk landscape-paintings and drawings of John Constable were "most probably East Anglian hybrid elms... such as still grow in the same hedges" in Dedham Vale and East Bergholt. Elm trees in Old Hall Park, East Bergholt is often considered the finest of Constable's elm-studies.
Cultivars
At least 40 cultivars have been recorded, although some may not have survived Dutch elm disease: Cultivars at one time or another identified as U. × hollandica, but which may have suffered misidentification through confusion with U. glabra Huds. cultivars that share the same name: